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For many cell owners, their phone is an essential utility that they check frequently, keep close at all times, and would have trouble functioning without:Indeed according to the Pew study, many cell owners hear complaints from friends that they don?t devote enough time to monitoring their mobile communications:
Source: http://mediaconfidential.blogspot.com/2012/11/survey-best-and-worst-of-mobile.html
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>>> this morning in "today's" kitchen, empanadas step by step . these dough-filled delights are perfect for your next holiday party. we have the chef and owner of doro restaurant in greenwich city. good to see you again. these are really a great dish because you can put anything in them.
>> that's the thing. they're very versatile.
>> and from really savory to sweet.
>> absolutely. that's what we're going to show here today. we're going to give a quick demonstration on the dough.
>> all right.
>> we'll start with all-purpose flour. bring to a slight boil a little bit of water, little bit of butter and seasoning, a little bit of sea salt . so we're going to bring this over here. and you want to drop it in slowly. and let the dough hook actually create a little ball of dough. right?
>> and it's important for it to still be hot when you're doing it?
>> yes, because it brings together and creates a ball of dough. once you get this going here, it's going to turn into a ball of dough.
>> can you mix the dough ahead of time?
>> absolutely. you can have this up to a few days in advance.
>> okay.
>> and the important thing is to keep it covered and not let a dry skin to create on it. and let the dough rest before you use it. going out to the fillings, for starters, a little bit of ground chuck . you can add a little bit of tomato paste , tomato product, parsley, garlic, and we're going to stir that up. and let it all incorporate. once you have that going, very important when you make the empanadas is not to use the dough -- the filling inside the dough while it's hot. because when you fry them, they'll explode.
>> that's bad.
>> yeah. you don't want that.
>> unless you're looking for a party.
>> there you go.
>> boom.
>> now we're going to go on to three types of filling we can use. once we have the dough, this is the tomato --
>> roll that out flat.
>> roll it out nice and flat and you cut out a nice ring size so you can do the filling inside. we have the meat that we just prepared.
>> sure.
>> we have a chicken filled empanada, and this for a sweeter version, we have a sweet potato , which is my wife's favorite. little cream cheese and maple syrup . once you have the filling down like this, you're going to take a little bit of egg wash right back here to seal.
>> your glue?
>> yeah, this is the binding agent. so we do like this and fold it over. that's it right there. tuck it down nice and tight so it doesn't open on you. and with a fork, basically going to cramp it and make a bill it of a design. and now at this point, you can either cut them a little bit smaller or just leave it as is. let's go to the back --
>> that's the portuguese version of a wonton.
>> once we have them sealed off and ready, we're going to take a little bit of egg wash, put them into a little bit of bread crumbs, i'm using panko because it gives more texture.
>> what did we do before panko?
>> i don't know, but they're everywhere now. it's more important than the wheel. now we're going to dust this off like this and you end up with great empanadas, drop them into about 350, 360-degree oil.
>> i notice a candy thermometer there.
>> very important to know your temperature, because you want nice color without burning. 360 tends to cook through --
>> how long?
>> well, it really depends, maybe two minutes until you get nice golden brown .
>> right.
>> you end up with these beautiful empanadas like this. the three types we have here, these two are savory. chicken, meat --
>> food.
>> and the sweet empanadas.
>> just in time.
>> oh, no, i was looking for make-up and hair.
>> wow.
>> okay.
>> what kind is this one right here?
>> this is a chicken empanada.
>> spicy mayonnaise. this is ground beef and empanada.
>> these are perfect for a holiday party. thank you so much.
>> my pleasure. happy holidays .
>> happy holidays .
>>> coming up next --
Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/50009899/
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The theft included ambulance data from the City of North College Hill. ??Notification: Ambulance Data Theft (2012-11-30 01:02) FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla., Nov. 29, 2012 -- Advanced Data Processing, Inc., (the "Company"), a provider of technology-based services to the emergency medical services industry, learned on October 1, 2012 that individual account information from the ambulance billing system was illegally accessed, some of which was disclosed to a theft ring suspected of filing fraudulent federal tax returns with the IRS. With the Company's help, the authorities identified the employee who admitted to the crime. The employee was immediately terminated. 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The theft included ambulance data from the City of Omaha. ??Notification: Ambulance Data Theft (2012-11-30 01:02) FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla., Nov. 29, 2012 -- Advanced Data Processing, Inc., (the "Company"), a provider of technology-based services to the emergency medical services industry, learned on October 1, 2012 that individual account information from the ambulance billing system was illegally accessed, some of which was disclosed to a theft ring suspected of filing fraudulent federal tax returns with the IRS. With the Company's help, the authorities identified the employee who admitted to the crime. The employee was immediately terminated. The theft included ambulance data from the City of McAlester. ??Aviacomm Announces Collaboration with Toshiba for Joint Development of Radio Over Fiber Remote Base Stations (2012-11-30 01:02) Toshiba and Aviacomm agree to design in Aviacomm's ARF technology supporting multiple RF bands into the Toshiba Remote Base Station Product Line ??DTS Celebrates 10 Years of Audio Excellence in the Greater China Region (2012-11-30 00:57) DTS, Inc. (NASDAQ-NMS:DTSI), a leader in high-definition audio solutions and audio enhancement technologies, will be celebrating its 10-year anniversary of having offices in the Greater China region. To commemorate 10 years within the Greater China region and as a way of giving thanks to its partners within the region, DTS will be hosting a two-day celebration in Shenzhen, China. |
Source: http://itbriefing.net/index.php?name=News&file=article&sid=354982
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The Binding of Isaac creator Edmund McMillen has announced that he's bringing his horror show roguelike to consoles via publisher Nicalis.
Rebirth will feature a second expansion that McMillen wanted to make for the Flash version, but couldn't, the developer noted in his post-mortem on Gamasutra. The console version will also have local co-op and new 16-bit graphics that will "still look and feel like the Flash version."
McMillen was initially hesitant to get back into console development after spending two years on Super Meat Boy. "I didn't want to deal with anything when it came to business," he wrote, but Nicalis agreed to handle that end of things, so the outspoken creator agreed.
Nicalis is mostly known for its work bringing the remake of Cave Story to the Wii, DS, and 3DS. It also ported Terry Cavanagh's retro platformer VVVVVV to the 3DS eShop earlier this year.
As for what platforms The Binding of Isaac: Rebirth will be on, it's not exactly clear. "It's still too early to tell for sure what consoles the game will end up on, but both Microsoft and Sony feel like it would be a perfect fit for their digital platforms, and we have a feeling the new look might soften up a few people at Nintendo for a possible Wii U/3DS eShop release," McMillen wrote. This would be a big change of heart after Nintendo initially rejected it, due to its controversial content.
As for mobile devices, McMillen stated, "I'm wary about how the game might control on iPad, but if they [Nicalis] can make it work, I'm all for it."
Elsewhere in the post-mortem, McMillen noted that The Binding of Isaac sold over one million copies on PC and Mac in its first year on Steam and a quarter of those who bought the game also purchased its expansion, The Wrath of the Lamb.
The Binding Of Isaac: Wrath of the Lamb trailer
Source: http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2012-11-28-the-binding-of-isaac-rebirth-coming-to-consoles
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Stockton, California, has the highest U.S. foreclosure rate. It also has a housing shortage.
The number of homes for sale in the city fell 42% in October from a year earlier. Listings routinely attract multiple offers. Prices are on the rise.
When banks pulled back on foreclosures two years ago following a government investigation into allegations of faulty practices, market researchers, academics and Wall Street analysts said that a surge of delinquent homes would deluge the U.S. market once lenders resolved the claims and worked through backlog, driving down prices for years to come. RealtyTrac Inc., a seller of property data, warned a year ago of a ?new set of incoming foreclosure waves.? Susan Wachter, professor at the University of Pennsylvania?s Wharton School, said in February that a logjam may be ?unleashed? and destabilize the market.
In fact, the flood failed to materialize, even after the five biggest U.S. mortgage servicers reached a US$25-billion settlement with federal and state regulators in February. Instead, the number of properties for sale shrank to the fewest in a decade, prices appreciated at the fastest pace since 2005, and the gradual healing of the housing market helped boost consumer confidence and the economy.
?We don?t have enough homes now to meet the needs of the market,? Paul Jacobson, a Stockton native and real estate broker for 22 years, said as he cruised the city?s northern fringe, where suburbia meets farmland. ?People see a foreclosed home for sale in this area and they?re going to jump on it.?
Bank Deals
Banks have stepped up foreclosure alternatives to avoid legal challenges. They?re forgiving debt, modifying payment plans and approving short sales that allow homeowners to sell for less than they owe.
The federal government, criticized by consumer activists for failing to prevent more than 4.7 million homes from being lost to foreclosure or short sales since President Barack Obama took office in January 2009, is also helping to stem the crisis. Expanded loan-modification programs have gained traction, and the Federal Reserve has kept bank interest rates near zero. Investors including Blackstone Group LP and Colony Capital LLC are purchasing thousands of foreclosed homes in bulk before they even hit the market, further limiting new supply.
With the unemployment rate also coming down, concerns are fading that a deluge in foreclosures will destabilize the housing market as it recovers from a six-year slump.
?Wrong?
?Many of us, myself included, feared a wave of foreclosures when the settlement came,? Wachter, professor of real estate and finance at Wharton in Philadelphia, said in a telephone interview. ?I was wrong.?
Slowing the foreclosure process has allowed banks to avoid booking losses on non-performing loans, said Joshua Rosner, an analyst with Graham Fisher & Co. in New York. U.S. banks reduced their net charge-off rate on mortgages to 0.77% in the second quarter, the most recent available, from a high of 1.81% at the end of 2009, according to data Rosner compiled. That drop occurred as the rate of non-current loans declined to 9.77% from 10.15% in late 2009.
?The goal all along ? from the banks, the servicers and the government ? was sort of to slow walk the whole thing, bleed it through over time,? Rosner said in a telephone interview.
Prices Rise
The strategy may be paying off. Home prices in 20 U.S. cities rose 3% in September from a year earlier, the most since 2010, the S&P/Case-Shiller index showed this week.
An index of pending home resales climbed 5.2% in October, exceeding the highest estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists, figures from the National Association of Realtors showed Thursday in Washington. The median price of an existing home sold last month jumped 11% from a year earlier to US$178,600, the steepest annual increase since November 2005, according to the group. The number of previously owned homes on the market in October fell 1.4% to 2.14 million, the fewest since December 2002.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York estimated that as many as 1.8 million properties would be taken back by banks in 2012, according to a January speech by President William Dudley. Through October, there have been about 559,000 home seizures, indicating a pace of about 650,000 for the year, according to Daren Blomquist, vice president of RealtyTrac.
The so-called shadow inventory of pending foreclosures, which may be larger than the visible supply of previously owned homes for sale, is shrinking as new defaults decline and banks work through their backlog of bad loans. Home loans that were more than 90 days late or in the foreclosure process, a proxy for the shadow inventory, fell to 7.03% of properties with a mortgage in the third quarter, the lowest share since 2008, the Mortgage Bankers Association said two weeks ago.
Managed Process
While lenders may bring more distressed properties to market over the next year, it won?t be enough to depress values, said Vishwanath Tirupattur, housing strategist at Morgan Stanley in New York.
?I don?t anticipate a flood that will take the market down with it,? he said in a telephone interview. ?It will be a much more managed process.?
David McNew/Getty Images filesThe so-called shadow inventory of pending foreclosures, which may be larger than the visible supply of previously owned homes for sale, is shrinking.
The shadow inventory ? which also includes properties owned by banks but not for sale ? fell from an estimated 8.8 million homes in 2010 to 5.36 million as of this month, a faster decline than expected as fewer loan modifications re-defaulted, according to Tirupattur.
Changes to Obama?s loan-modification program had the biggest impact on reducing pending foreclosures since late 2010 by creating a template that lenders followed, Wachter said. That included incentives to compensate loan servicers for reducing principal on loans for delinquent borrowers. In January, the administration tripled the award to 63 cents for every $1 in writedowns.
?Transformative Steps?
?The loan modifications were successful in this new wave,? she said. ?Transformative steps were being put into place in the loan modification process. I underestimated how transformative those reforms would be.?
An estimated 1 million homeowners qualify for payment-plan changes with principal reductions under Obama?s guidelines, according to Wachter. Assuming a redefault rate of 25%, that would result in almost 750,000 sustainable modifications, Wachter wrote with Mark Zandi, Celia Chen and Cristian deRitis of Moody?s Analytics Inc. in a report published in May.
?Along with those that would take place in any event, this is about the number needed to forestall any further house-price declines,? they said.
Principal Forgiveness
Since the February settlement, the five largest U.S. mortgage servicers provided loan relief to 309,385 borrowers, including trial plans, according to a Nov. 19 report by Joseph Smith, monitor of the deal. Almost 22,000 borrowers had principal forgiveness totaling US$2.55-billion. The companies, which include Bank of America Corp. and JPMorgan Chase & Co., agreed to short sales for 113,000 borrowers for another US$13.1-billion in principal write downs, Smith?s report said.
The settlement helped stabilize prices, in part, by encouraging alternatives to foreclosures, including principal forgiveness and short sales, said Nela Richardson, senior economic analyst with Bloomberg Government. Modified loans have a high default rate and may eventually show up as foreclosures or short sales, she said.
?In this sense, I think the shadow inventory is still looming but it does not look like it will come out of the shadows all at once,? Richardson said in an e-mail. ?Rather, properties will trickle out into the market.?
About 940,000 modifications will be completed this year, including 100,000 resulting from the US$25-billion mortgage settlement, according to a Nov. 21 report by JPMorgan analysts led by John Sim. The pace will fall next year to about 530,000 as the pool of eligible borrowers shrinks.
Short Sales
Short sales made up 9.3% of transactions in September, up from 7.8% a year earlier and 5.8% in September 2009, according to CoreLogic Inc., an Irvine, California-based real estate data firm.
?The best, lasting legacy of the crisis is that the industry has created a more nuanced approach to loss disposition,? said Mark Fleming, chief economist of CoreLogic. ?I don?t think the idea of evaluating a delinquent borrower for all different alternatives goes away after we?ve dealt with the shadow inventory. I think that?s here to stay.?
In Stockton, about 80 miles (129 kilometers) east of San Francisco by car, the foreclosure crisis is easing after a plunge in home values that has left prices down 60% from a 2006 peak. The city earlier this year became the largest in the U.S. to file for bankruptcy protection from creditors after the collapse of the housing market left it with mounting retiree health-care costs for employees and an eroding tax base amid accounting errors that overstated municipal revenues.
Highest Rate
One in 67 of Stockton?s households received a foreclosure filing in the third quarter, the highest rate of any U.S. metropolitan area with a population of more than 200,000, according to RealtyTrac. The number of filings of default, auction or repossession fell 21% from a year earlier.
William Hoeurn, a teacher?s assistant in Stockton, last month won a US$337,906 principal reduction on his mortgage from Bank of America, reducing monthly payments on his three-bedroom house to US$884 from US$2,362. Hoeurn fell behind on his loan payments after his wife lost her job and two of his grown children, who helped pay the mortgage, moved out of the home.
?Before, I was having bad dreams that I am losing my house,? Hoeurn, 66, a refugee from Cambodia, said during an interview in his kitchen. ?Now, I feel very happy.?
Short Sales
The number of bank-owned homes listed for sale in Stockton plunged 72% in September from a year earlier, according to MetroList Services Inc., a Sacramento, California-based listing information service. Short sale listings fell 63% to 155 homes.
If they flooded the market, prices would go down. So they?re getting more for what they?re selling. At the same time, it?s making more work for us
Re-sale prices rose 14.6% in the 12 months through October to US$179,570 in San Joaquin County, where Stockton is the county seat, according to the California Association of Realtors.
Peter Lemos, code enforcement field manager for Stockton?s police department, said he suspects banks are delaying foreclosures to reduce the supply of houses on sale and keep prices higher.
?If they flooded the market, prices would go down,? Lemos said during an interview in his office. ?So they?re getting more for what they?re selling. At the same time, it?s making more work for us.?
Painting Lawns
There were 6,650 properties with unresolved code violations as of Sept. 30, about two-thirds of which were vacant because the owners walked away and banks hadn?t foreclosed, Lemos said. His team stages night raids to oust squatters from abandoned properties. To give the appearance homes are occupied, they paint dry lawns green.
Rick Simon, a spokesman for Bank of America, and Tom Kelly, a spokesman for JPMorgan, said they aren?t keeping foreclosed properties off the market to boost prices or avoid booking losses.
?Under servicing agreements and investor guidelines, we generally are compelled to move defaulted loans through the foreclosure process and bring them to market without undue delays in order to curtail servicing costs and recover as much of the investment for the owner of the loan as possible,? Simon said in an e-mail.
Potential Foreclosures
The inventory of potential foreclosures remains a threat across the U.S. and could result in a new wave of defaults and depress home values, especially if the economy slows, said Robert Shiller, an economics professor at Yale University. Homeowners who owe more than their properties are worth are more likely to default if they lose a job, need to move for employment, or simply decide to walk away, he said.
?I?m still worried about home price declines,? Shiller, and co-creator of the S&P/Case-Shiller home-price indexes, said in a telephone interview. ?It?s funny how people have so much confidence in the recovery. History shows that these markets are hard to predict.?
Glenn Lowson for National Post?I?m still worried about home price declines,? said Robert Shiller, co-creator of the S&P/Case-Shiller home-price indexes.
Delaying the process may also be hindering a faster recovery, said Anthony B. Sanders, an economics professor at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia.
?The best cure for any market meltdown is to let prices fall to whatever level is needed to clear it,? he said. ?Instead, we?re sitting here in 2012 and we?re still not out of the woods yet. The wisdom of delaying foreclosures etc. was more of a political act than an economic act.?
Bank Seizures
Mortgages on homes seized by banks averaged a record 708 days delinquent in September, up from 624 days a year earlier, according to Lender Processing Services Inc. The U.S. average was 367 days in December 2008, before Obama took office and launched an alphabet soup of programs to help struggling homeowners keep their residences.
Maybe bureaucracy is actually helping, in this case, to diffuse the impact of the foreclosures
The February mortgage settlement restricted lenders from so-called ?dual-tracking? ? simultaneously pursuing a foreclosure while borrowers were in the process of applying for a loan modification ? a limitation that prolongs the time it takes lenders to repossess a house.
?In hindsight, by delaying and prolonging the foreclosure process, that gave the market time to stabilize and get back on its feet,? said Blomquist of RealtyTrac. ?Maybe bureaucracy is actually helping, in this case, to diffuse the impact of the foreclosures. Talk about unintended consequences.?
Fed Prevents
Low interest rates engineered by the Federal Reserve prevented a wave of defaults that would have been triggered by resets for borrowers with adjustable-rate mortgages, said Karen Weaver, head of market strategy and research at Seer Capital Management LP in New York.
?With very low interest rates, that?s been completely finessed,? Weaver said in a telephone interview. ?That?s another reason we haven?t had the tsunami.?
An Obama program begun in February allowing refinancing for Americans with more than 125% negative equity also has reduced incentives for underwater homeowners to abandon their property. The higher threshold opens the door for about 5 million borrowers to refinance, according to CoreLogic.
More than 100,000 borrowers a month, most of whom have no equity in their homes, have been able to get lower interest rates through the Home Affordable Refinance Program.
?We were originally skeptical,? Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist for Capital Economics Ltd., wrote in a note sent last week. ?But we have to admit that it has made a significant difference.?
The foreclosure slowdown took place as the broader economy began to heal. The unemployment rate fell to 7.8% in September, the lowest since Obama took office.
Household Formations
Household formations increased to an annual pace of 1.15 million in the third quarter, driving down the vacancy rate for rental homes to its lowest rate since 2002, while the vacancy rate for owner-occupied properties dropped to 1.9%, a level last seen in 2005, according to the Census Bureau.
Homes that are seized by banks are attracting investors, many of which aim to turn them into rentals. Private-equity firms are raising as much as US$8-billion to buy single-family homes, often purchasing at auctions or directly from banks before the properties are publicly listed for sale. New York- based Blackstone, the world?s biggest private-equity firm. has been buying US$100-million of houses a week, Chairman Stephen Schwarzman said during an Oct. 18 earnings call.
For those foreclosed properties that do hit the market, investor purchases are rising. All-cash sales represented 29% of existing-home deals in October, according to the National Association of Realtors. Investors, who account for most cash sales, purchased 20% of homes in October, up from 18% the previous month and a year earlier.
Phoenix Demand
Some hot markets are seeing even more demand. In Arizona?s Maricopa County, home of Phoenix, investors accounted for a third of home purchases, including those at auctions, said Michael Orr, director of real estate research at Arizona State University?s W.P. Carey School of Business.
Investors and other homebuyers are moving east toward Stockton from the San Francisco Bay area, where the technology industry has kept property values high, said Jerry Abbott, president of Grupe Real Estate, a Stockton-based sales and development company that has acquired more than 1,000 rental homes since 2010.
?My guess is 50% of the active closings are investors,? Abbott said in a telephone interview. ?Everybody and his uncle wants to get in at low prices.?
Bloomberg News
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As Washington confronts the 'fiscal cliff' and seeks a deal to reduce the deficit, one key issue is the tax rate. Comparatively, US taxes are low, but politically, raising them is a nonstarter.
By Mark Trumbull,?Staff writer / November 29, 2012
President Barack Obama gestures as he speaks in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, on the White House campus in Washington, Wednesday, Nov. 28, about how middle class Americans would see their taxes go up if Congress fails to act to extend the middle class tax cuts. The president said he believes that members of both parties can reach a framework on a debt-cutting deal before Christmas.
Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP
EnlargeAt the heart of the current debate over the so-called ?fiscal cliff? is a fundamental question: Are US budget deficits so high because the government spends too much or because Americans are paying too little in taxes?
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Or is the answer a bit of both?
Something has to give. Both President Obama and Republicans in Congress agree the country must take steps to reduce budget deficits, even as it?s also wise to soften the impact of the fiscal cliff ? the negative impact of tax hikes and spending cuts that are currently slated to go into effect on Jan. 1.
One lens on the debate is global ? checking how the US compares with other advanced economies. Such a check-up gives some useful context to the debate, even though the exercise isn?t meant to imply that the US should mimic other nations.
The upshot: Judged by global comparison, the US is taxed relatively lightly, so much so that the country could close its deficit over the next decade entirely via tax hikes, while still keep its tax revenue below European levels.
But America also appears to have a spending problem ? notably when it comes to health care ? over the longer term. And just because American taxes are on the low end of the scale doesn?t mean that raising taxes would be easy for the economy to bear.
Another big lesson from overseas: America isn?t alone when it comes to having chronic budget deficits. It has company from Japan and many European nations. The point here is that higher taxes alone do not guarantee balanced budgets. One still must spend appropriately.
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) estimates that in 2010 American individuals and businesses paid taxes (federal, state, and local) that amounted to 24.8 percent of US gross domestic product. That compares with 33.8 percent of GDP for the OECD overall, encompassing more than 30 advanced economies.
That?s a big gap. Nine percentage points of GDP, to be precise.
And every other large advanced economy in the world ranks higher than the US in the percentage of GDP paid in taxes. On the OECD list, only Chile and Mexico have lower overall taxes as a share of GDP (about 20 percent and 19 percent, respectively).
Democrats can point to this as evidence that higher taxes should be part of the solution.
In fact, although this idea is politically unpalatable, Congress could close America?s budget deficits over the rest of this decade entirely through tax hikes ? and America would still have below-average taxes among OECD nations.
As an illustration, consider that Obama's most recent budget plan (which he proposed in February) envisions bringing deficits down to 3 percent of GDP at the end of the decade through relatively modest changes to current policy: some spending restraint and some tax hikes that amount to about 1 percent of GDP. So, operating from the Obama template, even if you eliminated the plan?s spending restraint, the tax hikes needed to eliminate deficits altogether wouldn?t be large enough to push US taxes up to 34 percent of GDP.
OK, we?ll get real now. Politically that scenario is a nonstarter. The presidential election was a contest between Mitt Romney, who wanted to keep taxes low for all Americans, and Obama, who pledged to keep taxes low for 98 percent of households ? while raising them modestly for the rich.
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By GREG RISLING
Associated Press
Associated Press Sports
updated 6:19 p.m. ET Nov. 28, 2012
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Former Baltimore Orioles third baseman Doug DeCinces and three others have been indicted on insider trading charges for allegedly profiting from information prior to the takeover of a Southern California medical device company.
DeCinces was charged Wednesday with 42 counts of securities fraud and one count of money laundering. He is scheduled to appear in court Dec. 17.
Prosecutors say DeCinces received information from an official at Advanced Medical Optics, Inc. regarding a takeover offer by Abbott Laboratories. Authorities say DeCinces made about $1.3 million after he bought stock in Advanced Medical Optics and sold it soon after Abbott's tender offer was publicly announced.
DeCinces last year agreed to pay $2.5 million to settle a civil lawsuit filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
It wasn't immediately known if DeCinces had retained an attorney.
? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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More newsHBT: Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens are two players who, in a just world, would be unanimous selections for induction but who will almost certainly not make the Hall. Let?s first walk through their obvious qualifications.
Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens and Sammy Sosa are listed on the baseball Hall of Fame ballot for the first time, setting up an election sure to become a referendum on the Steroids Era.
Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/50002480/ns/sports-baseball/
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Not to throw a stone, but did the lender obtain an appraisal for this 30% equity? Is there any chance you can pay down the mortgage on the condo to hit this magical 30%? The lender is concerned you might buy and bail...in other words, once in your new home, you may suspend payments on your condo.
You might be able to hire a licensed appraiser to get a very accurate number? to work with, or better yet, request the lender to order an appraisal (you may have to pay for it).
Other than these ideas, the other posts list out your options well.
Best wishes, Jim
Source: http://www.zillow.com/advice-thread/Rented-my-Condo-Closing-Failed-at-Last-Minute/469716/
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by TERESA WOODARD
WFAA
Posted on November 27, 2012 at 11:16 PM
FARMERS BRANCH -- Inside a Farmers Branch apartment, markings on a wall prove just how quickly children grow.
There's a line for Ashly, a few years ago. Below that a line for Ramses, and under that, a line for Axel. All three children are now much taller than when the markings started.
Not far from the markings, Ramses, now four, and Axel, now two, share a bed and watch a movie about a superhero. It's entertaining to kids with super-complicated conditions.
"I don't know how to explain it, but I'm very concerned for my sons," said their mother, Erica Dominguez in broken English.
Ramses has a heart condition and a throat defect. He was, at one time, on the heart transplant list at Children's Medical Center. He can't swallow whole foods. He has treatments and doctors appointments every three months, at least, Erica said. Axel was born with water on his brain. The effects of that are not completely known.
Erica came to the United States from Mexico, and then gave birth to three children. The oldest child, Ashly, is now 8.
In 2010, Erica was caught shoplifting $60 worth of merchandise from a Macy's. She plead guilty and completed her probation.
"It's something dumb that I did," she said through a translator.
She has now been ordered to leave the country.
"I don't want to go back to Mexico," she said. "I want to stay here for [my sons'] treatment."
Erica has been told she can take her children with her, or leave them here with their father, who works two jobs.
"I don't want them to suffer for the mistake I made," she said.
Erica appealed the deportation order, providing the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) with stacks of medical records, including a letter from a pediatrician stating it is in Ramses' best interest for his mother to remain in Dallas. She also gave them a letter from a Children's Medical Center social worker saying he was at risk of "serious health complications including sudden death" if he left the city.
ICE said a child's health is something agents consider when determining whether someone should be deported.
Advocate Ralph Isenberg, who runs the Isenberg Center for Immigration Empowerment, is working on her case. One appeal has been denied. But now he and Erica's attorney are asking for a year's stay on the deportation.
"We're simply asking that the woman not be deported," he said. "She made an error in 2010, and she's paid for that error."
"In the case of extreme family separation, you are permitted to parole or allow people in the U.S.," he said. "And this is clearly a case of extreme family separation."
Erica said if she's forced to leave the country, she will leave her children in Texas.
"My kids need to stay here to grow and get better," she said. "Why do they have to suffer for my mistake?"
Source: http://www.wfaa.com/news/Mom-facing-de-181120011.html
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The next chapter in the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians is about to be written.?On Thursday, the United Nations will vote on whether Palestine should be raised to the status of "non-member observer state" at the United Nations, rather than the status of "observer entity" which it currently holds. This seems like hair-splitting, but it is a contentious issue. To the Palestinians, it represents a move to coalesce international opinion behind their bid for statehood. To Israel, it is seen as an act of bad faith, a gazumping of the stalled peace negotiations. The UN must decide which view is more persuasive.
Britain has traditionally held a generally sceptical view of the bid, but ? like Spain, and many other European nations ? has not officially decided which way to vote. The Foreign Secretary, however, is expected to make a landmark statement later today in which he reveals that Britain will vote in favour of the enhancement if Palestinian leaders agree to modify their resolution, and commit to resume peace negotiations with Israel without preconditions.
This major shift in the British position looks to be symptomatic of a wider movement towards support for the Palestinian cause among European countries, the allegiance of whom is likely to decide the outcome. Although Germany is still anticipated to vote against, Austria has said it will vote for, and believes that more than half the 27 member states will do the same. Yesterday, France, which had also been dithering, came out in support of the Palestinians. Further afield, the story is the same; in Australia, the decision has been taken to soften from a no-vote to an abstention. It does look like Mahmoud Abbas is set for a win, despite the fact that America and Israel staunchly oppose the motion.
Although Israel is understandably disgruntled at being forced into a corner in this way, the fact remains that without a move like this, nothing would happen. The peace talks are all but dead; the Foreign Secretary is right to call on the Palestinians to return to the peace process, but it must be acknowledged that the peace talks collapsed in 2010 mainly because Israel refused to freeze settlement building in the West Bank. Since then, things have only worsened: with every passing month, the facts on the ground make the possibility of a viable state of Palestine on the West Bank even more remote.
As I wrote yesterday, the leadership of Mahmoud Abbas, which has long been seen as weak by Palestinians, has been further undermined by the conflict in Gaza. In achieving negotiations with Israel by force, Hamas has convinced many Palestinians that it is better able to effect change than the more moderate regime on the West Bank. Should Abbas succeed on Thursday, it will be a victory for a man who has rejected violence and pursued a diplomatic path. Should he fail, the lesson to Palestinians will be clear: only the gun ? or rocket launcher, or bus bomb ? talks.
Operation Pillar of Cloud was remarkable in the level of international support that Israel enjoyed. Whereas most recent conflicts have sparked widespread condemnation of the Jewish state, in this case the international community recognised Israel's right to defend itself against sustained terrorist attacks on civilian population centres. This is good and right. The militants were clearly to blame, as they have been many times in the past. But the longer Israel remains intransigent on the West Bank, the more its arguments for self-defence will be undermined. The negotiations between Israel and Hamas may lead to an easing of the blockade, and a degree of normalisation being introduced to Gaza. But it must be remembered that for all its problems, Israel no longer occupies Gaza; the epicentre of the conflict lies on the West Bank. Given the more tolerant position of Mr Abbas, this should be a problem that is ? relatively speaking ? easier to solve, if Israel was only able to confront those on the hard right, impose a settlement freeze, and return to the negotiating table.
Peace will never be secured without painful concessions on both sides. For Israel, that pain will inevitably mean dismantling some of the settlements and recognising a state of Palestine. It would be naive to suggest that all threats to Israel would cease with the establishment of a Palestinian state. When the new borders are drawn up, Israel must not allow its security to be compromised. After all, the withdrawal from Gaza in 2005 was met with only more violence. But the West Bank is less volatile than Gaza, and the Palestinians are desperate for self-determination. The longer this need goes unfulfilled, the more insecure the region will become. True, the territory was won by Israel in defensive wars; true, there has never have been a Palestinian state at any time in history. But whatever the rights and wrongs, circumstances demand it now.
If the member states vote to enhance the status of Palestine on Thursday, this will send a clear message that the cause of Palestinian statehood is recognised by the international community, if it is still a long way off. It will not change the facts on the ground; the particulars would still needs to be negotiated, as before. But the hard truth is that the two-state solution is the only realistic endgame. As unlikely as it sounds, Israel would do well to swallow its pride and follow Britain's lead to offer conditional support for the enhancement of Palestine at the UN. Sooner or later, the Jewish state must recognise that this is the only means to solve this depressingly permanent crisis. And given the mounting death toll, sooner is better than later. As Yitzhak Rabin famously said: "enough of blood and tears. Enough!"
Read all Jake Wallis Simons' Telegraph Blog posts here
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ScienceDaily (Nov. 28, 2012) ? Using an enhanced form of "chemical microscopy" developed at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), researchers there have shown that they can peer into the structure of blended polymers, resolving details of the molecular arrangement at sub-micrometer levels. The capability has important implications for the design of industrially important polymers like the polyethylene blends used to repair aging waterlines.
Polyethylene is one of the most widely produced and used polymers in the world. It's used in many familiar applications -- milk bottles, for instance -- but the NIST research is motivated by a more critical application: water pipes. Aging water infrastructure is a significant national issue. The Environmental Protection Agency has reported that in the United States there are over 240,000 water main breaks per year, leaks wasting 1.7 trillion gallons of water per year, and costs to taxpayers of $2.6 billion per year.
Polyethylene pipes are one potential solution. They're relatively inexpensive to make and install, and they have negligible corrosion issues and a predicted service life of up to a century under ideal conditions. Unfortunately, current test standards do not address service life under field conditions, especially for fusion joints in the pipes. This uncertainty has slowed the use of large diameter polyethylene pipe.
The industry standard for polyethylene pipes is a blend of two different forms of the polymer, a medium-weight, high-density polyethylene (HDPE) and a high molecular weight "linear low-density polyethylene" (LLDPE). Combining the two, says NIST materials scientist Young Jong Lee, dramatically improves the toughness, strength and resistance to fracture of the polymer.
The problem for quantitative service-life prediction is understanding exactly why that is. Developing the necessary predictive models has been hindered by knowing just how the HDPE and LLDPE molecules blend together. They are so close chemically that X-ray or electron imaging -- the usual go-to techniques for molecular structure -- can't readily distinguish them.
The NIST team is using a variation of Raman spectroscopy, which can distinguish different chemical species -- and measure how much of each -- by analyzing the frequencies associated with the different vibrational modes of each molecule. The exact mix of these frequencies is an extremely discriminating "fingerprint" for any particular molecule without help of fluorescence labeling. Raman spectroscopy using focused laser beams has been used as a chemical microscope, able to detail the structure of complex objects by mapping the chemical composition at each point in a three-dimensional space.
The NIST instrument, called "BCARS" (broadband coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering) microscopy, uses a pair of lasers to gather Raman data at least 10 times faster than other Raman imaging methods, a critical feature because of the vast amount of data that must be gathered to understand such highly structured blend systems. The extra trick is to substitute deuterium ("heavy hydrogen") for hydrogen atoms in the HDPE component. The deuterium strongly shifts the Raman spectrum, making it easy to distinguish the two components. By controlling the polarization of the light, the technique provides additional details on the local crystal orientation of molecules in the polymer. The images show, for example, the formation of microscopic spherical regions of partial crystallization with the LLDPE more concentrated towards the center.
"This is a fast, three-dimensional chemical imaging technique that's particularly useful for studying microstructures of polymeric materials," says Lee. The group currently is using BCARS to find the correlation between microscopic structures with characteristics of deformation and thermal fusion on polyethylene pipes.
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